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How to Write Better Essays PDF

298 Pages·2007·0.86 MB·English
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How to Write Better Essays Bryan Greetham HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page i How to Write Better Essays HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page ii Palgrave Study Guides A Handbook of Writing for Engineers Joan van Emden Effective Communication for Science and Technology Joan van Emden How to Write Better Essays Bryan Greetham Key Concepts in Politics Andrew Heywood Linguistic Terms and Concepts Geoffrey Finch Literary Terms and Criticism (second edition) John Peck and Martin Coyle The Mature Student’s Guide to Writing Jean Rose The Postgraduate Research Handbook Gina Wisker Practical Criticism John Peck and Martin Coyle Research Using IT Hilary Coombes The Student’s Guide to Writing John Peck and Martin Coyle The Study Skills Handbook Stella Cottrell Studying Economics Brian Atkinson and Susan Johns Studying History (second edition) Jeremy Black and Donald M. MacRaild Studying Mathematics and its Applications Peter Kahn Studying Psychology Andrew Stevenson Teaching Study Skills and Supporting Learning Stella Cottrell How to Begin Studying English Literature (second edition) Nicholas Marsh How to Study a Jane Austen Novel (second edition) Vivien Jones How to Study Chaucer (second edition) Rob Pope How to Study Foreign Languages Marilyn Lewis How to Study an E. M. Forster Novel Nigel Messenger How to Study a Thomas Hardy Novel John Peck How to Study James Joyce John Blades How to Study Linguistics Geoffrey Finch How to Study Modern Poetry Tony Curtis How to Study a Novel (second edition) John Peck How to Study a Poet (second edition) John Peck How to Study a Renaissance Play Chris Coles How to Study Romantic Poetry (second edition) Paul O’Flinn How to Study a Shakespeare Play (second edition) John Peck and Martin Coyle How to Study Television Keith Selby and Ron Cowdery www.palgravestudyguides.com HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page iii How to Write Better Essays Bryan Greetham HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page iv © Bryan Greetham 2001 No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced,copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright,Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency,90 Tottenham Court Road,London W1T 4LP. All rights reserved.No reproduction,copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The author has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright,Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 2001 by PALGRAVE Houndmills,Basingstoke,Hampshire RG21 6XS and 175 Fifth Avenue,New York,N.Y.10010 Companies and representatives throughout the world PALGRAVE is the new global academic imprint of St.Martin’s Press LLC Scholarly and Reference Division and Palgrave Publishers Ltd (formerly Macmillan Press Ltd). ISBN 0–333–94715–0 This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Greetham,Bryan,1946– How to write better essays/Bryan Greetham. p. cm.– (Palgrave study guides) Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 0–333–94715–0 1. English language – Rhetoric. 2. Exposition (Rhetoric) 3. Essay – Authorship. 4. Academic writing. I. Title. II. Series. PE1429 .G74 2001 808¢.042 – dc21 2001032790 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 Printed and bound in Great Britain by Creative Print and Design (Wales),Ebbw Vale HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page v For Pat, without whom nothing is possible, and two great men – my father, Robert Greetham, and Harry Rowe, whose rich and interesting life is still an inspiration. This page intentionally left blank HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page vii Contents Introduction ix The Stages 1 Stage 1 Interpretation of the Question 5 Introduction 7 1 Revealing the structure 9 2 A practical example 15 3 Learning to analyse 22 4 The three-step technique – Steps 1 and 2 27 5 Step 3 – Test your concept 36 6 Brainstorming 42 7 Flexibility 51 8 Using the right ability 56 9 The range of abilities 61 10 Changing our pattern of study 66 Stage 2 Research 73 Introduction 75 11 Reading purposefully 78 12 Processing the ideas 83 13 Note-taking for analysis and structure 94 14 Remembering your notes 101 15 Note-taking for criticism and evaluation 108 16 Organising your retrieval system 118 17 Organising your time 124 18 Your own personal timetable 132 vii HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page viii viii Contents Stage 3 Planning 139 Introduction 141 19 Planning that makes a difference 143 20 Editing and ordering your material 151 21 Planning for the exam 160 22 Revising for the exam 166 Stage 4 Writing 171 Introduction 173 23 Getting your own ideas down 176 24 Introductions 182 25 Paragraphs 187 26 Conclusions 197 27 Style – Simplicity 203 28 Style – Economy 215 29 Working with evidence 225 30 Plagiarism 233 31 Referencing and bibliographies 240 Stage 5 Revision 253 Introduction 255 32 Preserving your best ideas 258 33 Revising the structure 262 34 Revising the content 267 Conclusion 278 Bibliography 280 Index 281 HTWPR 7/26/01 8:36 PM Page ix Introduction (cid:2) About this book By the time we reach university a surprising number of us are con- vinced that we should know all we need to know about researching and writing essays. We’re inclined to argue that if we’ve got this far we should know how to analyse the implications of questions, read efficiently, take notes, plan and structure arguments, use evidence, and write light and interesting prose. Indeed these skills are the very thing that has got us this far in the first place, so to admit that we could be better at essay writing seems to be an admission that we’re lucky to have got this far. Instead of seeking help, then, to improve our skills, we settle for the strategy of just learning by our mistakes, or by example in those rare moments when we might see our tutor think through and analyse a difficult concept, or pull ideas together from different sources and syn- thesise them into a new way of looking at a problem. If we recognise the significance of the moment, and most of us don’t, then we might be lucky enough to retain a small inkling of what went on in the hope that we, too, might be able to do the same. But it need not be like this. The two types of skills that we all need to be successful in our courses – study skills (reading, note-taking, writing, organisation, and revision) and thinking skills (analysis, syn- thesis, discussion, argument, and use of evidence) – can be taught. There is nothing mysterious about them. They need not be the exclu- sive preserve of a few. And there is nothing particularly difficult about them either. Indeed, most of us have the abilities to succeed, if only we can unlock and use them by learning these simple skills. (cid:2) Learning the skills In this book you will learn not just the study skills, but the thinking skills too. What’s more, you won’t do this alone. At every step of the ix

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